i’m writing this like an incident report because that’s how it always begins: a quiet system, then a 2 a.m. alert, then a room full of people who thought approvals were airtight. The post-mortem rarely blames throughput. It traces back to permissions—who could sign, who shouldn’t have, and which key was exposed long before anyone noticed.

SlGN protocol doesn’t pretend speed solves that. It’s an SVM-based high-performance L1, yes, but framed with guardrails that assume humans make mistakes under pressure. Risk committees don’t debate TPS; they debate blast radius. Wallet approval flows become battlegrounds, not benchmarks.

Fabric Sessions sit at the center—enforced, time-bound, scope-bound delegation that limits authority before it becomes liability. “Scoped delegation + fewer signatures is the next wave of on-chain UX.” Not because it’s convenient, but because it narrows failure paths.

Execution lives modularly above a conservative settlement layer. That separation isn’t aesthetic—it’s containment. EVM compatibility shows up only to reduce tooling friction, not to redefine trust. The native token acts as security fuel; staking reads less like yield and more like responsibility.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN

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